Il 3 febbraio 2018 Luca Traini ha seminato il panico per le strade di Macerata. Nel giro di due ore, attraversando la città a bordo della sua Alfa 147, l'uomo ha sparato a nove persone, ferendone sei. Le vittime, vive per miracolo, erano tutte di persone di colore. Traini ha sparato anche contro dei negozi, a dei bar e a delle discoteche. Ha sparato infine contro le vetrine della sede cittadina del Pd. L'azione xenofoba si è conclusa al Monumento ai Caduti, dove Traini è stato arrestato dai Carabinieri. Prima di consegnarsi ai militari l'uomo, con la bandiera italiana legata al collo, ha rivolto al monumento il saluto romano, gridando "W l'Italia!"
#CronacheCriminali #LucaTraini #Crime #TrueCrime #Delitti #Misteri #Killer #SerialKiller #ColdCase #Cronaca #CronacaNera #Mistero #Delitto #Documentari #Documentario #Docu #Doc #DivinumCrime
#CronacheCriminali #LucaTraini #Crime #TrueCrime #Delitti #Misteri #Killer #SerialKiller #ColdCase #Cronaca #CronacaNera #Mistero #Delitto #Documentari #Documentario #Docu #Doc #DivinumCrime
Categoria
📺
TVTrascrizione
00:00:02good evening, our journey into the crime news continues, the search for those crimes that
00:00:07they struck us in a particular way that raised disturbing questions in us that
00:00:12they defined and told an era and its dark side this evening we are dealing with a story
00:00:18recently we are in 2018 when a boy from Macerata Luca Traini 28 years old starts shooting
00:00:26he goes crazy against all the black people he meets, he says, he does it to avenge a girl who was
00:00:33was murdered by a Nigerian, here is a story that tells us about one of the most important aspects
00:00:41those who are deficient in the spirit of the times and still follow racism, Traini's is a hate crime
00:00:48racial is a crime that speaks to us of the great problems of coexistence between us and them
00:00:54those who we feel are different from us and who a certain propaganda transforms into enemies to be eliminated
00:01:01we tell this story because it is a profoundly contemporary story even if it is
00:01:07resolved in a judicial way perhaps there are no answers perhaps we are only raising some
00:01:14But we want to ask questions and we want to address them together
00:01:38Luca Traini decides to become a vigilante because he wants to avenge the death of a girl.
00:01:45killed in her area in her land in her macerata by a Nigerian drug dealer and so
00:01:53that morning he takes a car, takes a gun and starts shooting wildly
00:02:00Panic in what until then had been one of the most peaceful provinces in Italy
00:02:05in the beautiful Macerata his is a story that began before it began in 2011 in July
00:02:12of 2011 when a Norwegian named Anders Breivik kills in cold blood with a ferocity
00:02:19impressive 77 young people participating in a rally of the Social Democratic Youth
00:02:25on the island of Utoya this Breivik who turns himself in and claims his actions in the trial had written
00:02:32a 1500 page delirious text published on the internet was called 2083 and was a sort of
00:02:40European manifesto of preventive attack the call to patriarchal values the need
00:02:48to declare and fight a war before it was too late against those who were there
00:02:54invading and stealing our identity but it was a story that had continued just a year before
00:03:02of the trailing gesture in 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia in the United States two days of guerrilla warfare
00:03:09urban between a gang of neo-Nazis armed with semi-automatic weapons first the locals and then a
00:03:18terrorist act with a car that hits and kills one person and injures 16 demonstrations that
00:03:27they are defined as delusional but when there are many of them when they repeat themselves one can only speak
00:03:34of delirium the same trailing gesture can be simply dismissed as a mad gesture or
00:03:41isn't there something much more important much deeper behind
00:03:58On the morning of February 3, 2018, a news item arrives on the news agencies. The news is confusing at first but it is clear.
00:04:09right from the start, it's serious, it's the classic incipit of every terrorist attack, I, as a magistrate
00:04:24I was on duty in the office and some police officers came to the courtroom.
00:04:34judicial to inform me that in Macerata some episodes of
00:04:43explosion of gunshots from shootings in the city
00:04:53It was not clear where these incidents of gunshot explosions had begun
00:05:15in particular, that morning the hearing for the validation of the arrest was also scheduled
00:05:22by Innusento Segale, the Nigerian citizen accused of having killed and dismembered the young woman
00:05:30Pamela Master Peter
00:05:34so there are many journalists in macerata the first thing I do when faced with this news
00:05:41shootings in the city of Macerata and call some colleagues who tell me look
00:05:48we don't know what's happening there are police cars and carabinieri everywhere you can hear them
00:05:54sirens, people in panic, the mayor gave orders to students not to leave the school
00:06:07I am Romano Carangini, mayor of Macerata. I ask everyone to stay in safe places.
00:06:16inside their homes inside their schools because in the city there is a madman who shoots
00:06:34the telephone lines of the operations center were absolutely under siege the first
00:06:40reports linked the gunshots to a black sedan that was raging from the south
00:06:48north of the city the puzzle pieces pointed to black people as targets and the explosion
00:06:56of gunshots at human height initially there was talk of a regulation of
00:07:01Nigerian gang accounts worried I called some friends I have in the prosecutor's office they told me
00:07:07which in fact were not a settling of scores between Nigerian gangs but an Italian boy
00:07:16that he was going around shooting, it becomes clear after a while what is really happening is not
00:07:30a terrorist attack as I feared as we feared but it is the work of one person alone in one person alone
00:07:36of a white boy on board an Alfa 147 driving around the city and shooting and shooting at whoever
00:07:45not to
00:07:45whoever was shooting black people, in short, that morning there is a boy who is walking
00:07:55the city is shooting wildly and among its targets we imagine we see a black boy
00:08:01who maybe is the same age as him who has been through all sorts of things who has escaped from a
00:08:06situation
00:08:06of famine of misery who risked his skin who perhaps paid traffickers who finally
00:08:11he thinks he has arrived in a quiet place where up until that moment no one had touched him
00:08:17they shoot at him we can get inside his head we can understand no we can't
00:08:23it's something too difficult to understand impossible impossible also because that morning it is macerated
00:08:36Carabinieri Macerata
00:08:37we are here in Corso Cairoli
00:08:45I was walking with a friend of mine and we wanted to go get a haircut.
00:08:49we met between corso cairoli and corso cavour and we were talking calmly
00:09:00I didn't see anything, I just realized that something sharp was going through my chest.
00:09:06something hit me in the chest but I didn't know what was happening
00:09:12is there a person on the ground?
00:09:14yes understood
00:09:16everyone started running I heard someone say he has a gun
00:09:20I couldn't do anything I didn't see anything and suddenly I found myself on the ground
00:09:27Cairoli port ok ok we'll be there right away
00:09:34there was a general alarm
00:09:43an alarm that kept the city under siege for several hours
00:09:54All the police forces have started searching for this car
00:09:59but also to carry out all the detection and trace acquisition operations
00:10:06of statements of any activity that could document these events
00:10:17and as the patrols converged we arranged them starting from the points where
00:10:25this person had shot as a sort of belting of the city we absolutely had to
00:10:32block and intercept as soon as possible the vehicle carrying the perpetrator or perpetrators
00:10:38of the massacre that was taking place
00:10:43At half past twelve we know that this person's racist rampage is over.
00:10:52it ends where it ends it ends in a symbolic place in Macerata
00:11:03to the war memorial which is a moment of clear and explicit fascist construction
00:11:13He takes the flag, puts it on his shoulders and goes in front of the war memorial
00:11:18he gives the Roman salute, the fascist salute, shouts long live Italy and hands himself over to the Carabinieri
00:11:31it was a matter of moments we got there we saw it we
00:11:36when we got out of the car we were already wearing all the protective devices and we had the
00:11:40weapons in hand and we ordered the subject to put his hands in plain sight
00:11:45and slowly approaching us immediately after arresting him we charged him
00:11:55In the service vehicle we transported him to the headquarters of the provincial command of the Carabinieri
00:12:00In Macerata the identity of the culprit is clear immediately after he turns himself in, he is a boy
00:12:0728 years old, his name is Luca Traini, he lives in Tolentino and he is a character who came out of nowhere
00:12:18character who drove around in his Alfa 147 for an hour and a half and shot every person
00:12:27of color
00:12:28that he met in his path not only to black people he also shot some
00:12:36discos he also shot at the headquarters of the Democratic Party and he also shot at some
00:12:43there is a thread that ties all this together, we understand its objectives a little later
00:12:58Luca Traini is an extremist who has internalized the polarization of a conflict that pushes towards hatred.
00:13:06in his pantheon however there are not only those who practice hatred like Brevik there are also
00:13:13those who preach hatred it is something that you breathe that is in the air something deeply
00:13:19destructive a contrast often too often artfully fueled and then it ends up that hatred
00:13:28a fragile girl with a desperate childhood on the margins like the same one falls on the weakest
00:13:37trains and yet there is a different way of interpreting relationships, relationships, living in different communities
00:13:46Among them, I am of the opinion that the phenomenon of immigration has changed very little in recent times.
00:13:57hundreds of thousands of years we must distinguish migrants into two large categories: those who are
00:14:05those who left their residence due to force majeure or necessity are called migrations
00:14:13forced migrations are those forced by wars, persecutions or even by changes
00:14:22climate and there are still many forced migrants in the world, the UNHCR has counted them among those
00:14:29international and domestic ones more than 80 million we are now almost at 100 million every year
00:14:35then there are the slightly freer migrations, there is never absolute freedom to migrate
00:14:42because most people would prefer to continue living where some of them are though
00:14:49they consider leaving for the most varied reasons these are migrations a
00:14:54more free all European countries have not faced new immigrations into Europe in the
00:15:02the last thirty years in a legal, political and social way correct the perception of immigration
00:15:09There is more and more need for a negative perception, the fewer they come the better and whoever comes is for
00:15:15definition of illegal immigrant I believe that we should look at them with benevolence because
00:15:24forecasts are that by 2050 the Italian population will decrease by 10 million
00:15:32so we have to think about whether we want to save our hospitals, our schools, our jobs
00:15:37we need to have more children but she thinks that 10 million children can be born
00:15:43In the next generations, policies to encourage birth rates are right but they will not solve the problem
00:15:50the question is a small drop the other bigger drop the glass are immigrations
00:15:57regular numbers of people who want to come here to speak Italian and live with us in compliance with the law
00:16:06Let's stop for a moment, we will continue to tell Luca Traini's story after the news
00:16:16we are telling the story of luca traini and his bloody raid of 3 february 2018 we are
00:16:23in macerata on board his black alfa 147 traini goes around shooting in the crowd wherever he sees
00:16:30of the
00:16:30immigrants the raid lasts two hours then he stops in front of the war memorial a monument
00:16:36of the fascist era, it is here that the carabinieri capture him, he lets himself be caught before being
00:16:42to be sick shouts long live Italy the reasons for his gesture are not immediately clear but they arouse
00:16:48Immediately questions and anxiety on the afternoon of February 3rd there are many questions
00:16:59Luca Traini is already in the barracks of the provincial command of the Carabinieri and is being subjected to a
00:17:04interrogation all the journalists are outside and are waiting to understand something more
00:17:14we knew he would be questioned for a long time he decides to answer in the meantime
00:17:19we end up in the gym he used to go to where he used to wear himself out with weights, one of the managers says that
00:17:26Luca Traini every morning when he went to the gym he would arrive and do the Roman salute he would do
00:17:31the classic Roman salute which is something we had told him that it bothered us that he didn't
00:17:35he could do in addition to making other statements based on racial hatred, we discover that
00:17:40Luca Traini was linked above all to Forza Nuova where they know him and admit to knowing him and also
00:17:47he had a history with Casa Pound and therefore neo-fascist movements and that is the first clue
00:17:58of its extremist political connotation
00:18:14The first meeting I have with Luca is on February 3rd. I see his dad first and he makes the appointment for me.
00:18:19and then me
00:18:20I'm here with the appointment at the Carabinieri station in Piazza Macerata and that's it
00:18:25It was the first meeting I had with Luca in the small room on the second floor of the provincial command
00:18:32of the Carabinieri of Macerata that moment there was the boy who inspired at least a little fear for
00:18:41its mass then had this Italian flag still that kept that photo that is going around and the photo
00:18:48taken inside that little room of the Carabinieri with Luca who still had the tricolour on his shoulders
00:18:59After his arrest, Traini was immediately taken to the barracks where he appeared lucid and proud of his action.
00:19:07violent act just committed he declares and admits that his purpose comes from the strong impulse
00:19:18emotional that learning of the murder of Pamela Mastro Pietro arouses in him
00:19:32Luca tells me about that February 3, 2018, when he went out in the morning to go to the gym
00:19:43of having turned on the radio and having heard the report of the discovery of the remains of the
00:19:51poor Pamela, this was what happened in Luca's story, it was the triggering effect
00:20:01Thanks to a passer-by's report, they found two suitcases abandoned on the edge of
00:20:05This road between the countryside and the industrial warehouses of Polenza in the province of Macerata
00:20:09and he broke something what are we talking about when we talk about the murder of pamela mastro pietro
00:20:27We're talking about a fragile girl with a difficult childhood and a fall into drug addiction.
00:20:34Pamela tries to recover in a community in Macerata in 2018 but the recovery paths
00:20:41they are difficult, they don't always succeed, sometimes they stop, sometimes they stop dramatically
00:20:47Pamela runs away from the therapeutic community after a series of unfortunate encounters ends up in the park of
00:20:53macerata where his nemesis is sold his destiny is called innocent osegale a violent
00:21:00a Nigerian who became a drug dealer after being kicked out of reintegration programs after
00:21:07Two days after the meeting, Pamela's dismembered body was found in two suitcases by investigators.
00:21:14They arrive immediately in Osegale and arrest him. He will be tried and sentenced to life imprisonment, but this is not enough for Luca.
00:21:22this is not his justice when he learns about Pamela's story as his lawyer says
00:21:29something inside him breaks
00:21:34Luca Traini hears what had happened, what had been discovered, therefore the murder of this
00:21:41young girl the ways in which her remains had been recovered and the identification of
00:21:47the one who was later found to be responsible for all this, therefore the Nigerian Osegale innocent
00:21:54then he decides to take the gun with the bullets different bullets are more than a hundred
00:22:05because he wanted to go and kill oserye which at that time that morning had to be
00:22:14he really feels the need to go to the court in Macerata to be questioned
00:22:21to avenge this great offense which, in addition to being the offense of a woman who has been
00:22:27abused, killed and bilipede is also an offence to the entire offended community that was
00:22:34expressed in his view by people as in I hear rye that immigrated irregularly
00:22:42and permanently in Italy in an irregular manner lives and supports himself by committing crimes by sifting
00:22:54a little bit scared then Luca thinks that this choice is not so much correct because he says I was scared
00:23:03out of fear of harming innocent people, the prison police officers who were escorting him to court
00:23:15for which he changes his mind
00:23:25he says that since he can't take it out on Osegale directly, he takes it out on all the other blacks who, like Osegale
00:23:35they deal drugs and therefore ruin the city, the youth, the society and therefore they deserve a sensational gesture to make people understand
00:23:49to give a signal
00:23:50of what is a situation that according to him could no longer be sustained or carried forward
00:24:15we become perfectly aware of the subject when we finally see it
00:24:26It's the evening of February 3rd, around midnight, he was interrogated for a long time by the Carabinieri of the command
00:24:35provincial
00:24:35the gates open, we finally see Luca Traini
00:24:44he had an almost grimace on his face but he seemed very very calm and very confident too
00:25:01and above all we notice on the temple a Germanic rune which was used as a third position symbol
00:25:16on that occasion I also noticed another thing that describes a lot about the character: he has a tattoo on his fingers
00:25:23outcast conscript meaning marginalized
00:25:30Luca Traini is an outcast, yes, but he's an outcast who has very clear ideas.
00:25:36an outcast who knows which side he's on may feel like the protector of the community
00:25:42He thinks he is acting to compensate the community for the violence it has suffered but does so through violence
00:25:50and it is a violence that generates hatred and it is a hatred that strikes down on the marginalized, on the desperate
00:25:56perhaps against those desperate people who have undertaken the journey of desperation and hope
00:26:02there is a book by a journalist and writer a really important book
00:26:06My journey as an undercover agent to Europe is called Bilal
00:26:09Fabrizio Gatti wrote it and he really did that trip as an undercover agent
00:26:15let's listen to a short snippet of it
00:26:18I've always wondered what's going on around a person
00:26:23the moment his mind decides to leave
00:26:28months or years before the body sets out on its journey
00:26:32or is just aware of it
00:26:33whatever the fact is
00:26:35the moment
00:26:38the reason why reasoning becomes aware
00:26:41that there are no alternatives left
00:26:44many African countries don't even have a registry office
00:26:49of their children that the world has lost during the journey
00:26:52they won't know
00:26:54we will never know
00:26:56and there is not a single national monument on which to remember them
00:27:00Our heads of state bring flowers to the altars of the fatherland every year
00:27:05they are photographed in moved silence in front of the tomb of the unknown soldier
00:27:10It is a generous duty to pay homage to those who fell in battle
00:27:14but our constitution is based on work
00:27:17not about war
00:27:20and yet to these thousands of unknown migrants
00:27:23dead looking for a job
00:27:25or to the slaves killed because they had found a job
00:27:28the fatherland has not yet dedicated a single altar
00:27:32the Lampedusa cemetery is full of anonymous graves
00:27:35a number
00:27:37instead of the name and photo above the gravestone
00:27:40but it would be enough to choose some
00:27:42and bring the remains to Rome
00:27:45Brussels
00:27:46Strasbourg
00:27:48Paris
00:27:49Madrid
00:27:50Berlin
00:27:51London
00:27:52Vienna
00:27:53Bern
00:27:54the symbolic destinations of the other face of Europe
00:27:58just to never forget
00:28:04and we return to Luca Traini
00:28:06he is in prison
00:28:08usually the defendants especially if they are accused of serious crimes
00:28:12they tend either not to speak or to seek justifications
00:28:15Traini is someone who, given the way he acted, wants to tell his story and tell his story.
00:28:28Luca Traini's Day of Extraordinary Madness
00:28:32we are able to reconstruct it through what he himself declared to the magistrate
00:28:38to the Carabinieri during a series of interrogations
00:28:44Trains
00:28:45Luca
00:28:46born in
00:28:47Marcella
00:28:48Wilber
00:28:49July 21st
00:28:5107
00:28:5289
00:28:52And
00:28:54President
00:28:56to
00:28:5631
00:28:57I met Traini in prison on February 6th.
00:29:01in evidence of validation of his arrest
00:29:05He was a very controlled person
00:29:09very eager to explain and to free herself
00:29:13recounting the whole process that had led him to develop this action
00:29:26That morning of February 3rd
00:29:28before coming to Macerata and starting shooting in the various areas where this happened
00:29:34he had almost announced stopping to get methane from his trusted distributor
00:29:40he had said he would come to Macerata to avenge Pamela
00:29:44He explained to the clerks at the service station that he was going to kill the drug dealers who had killed Pamela.
00:30:01He left the service station and got back into the car
00:30:04he meets again the gas station attendant who had filled him up with methane
00:30:08in a completely peaceful manner he tells him
00:30:12I'm going to kill the nigger who killed Pamela
00:30:18not only does he show him the gun too
00:30:21the Glock he carried with him
00:30:23and then he sets off at full speed towards Macerata
00:30:33the kill or rye project ends immediately
00:30:38immediately turn to another type of project
00:30:40which is to kill drug dealers
00:30:42and according to his syllogism all drug dealers are black
00:30:45it meant walking around the city
00:30:48to shoot black people
00:30:59I don't regret anything I've done
00:31:03I only wanted to hit males
00:31:06of the included
00:31:09of the drug dealer
00:31:11Pamela's alleged murder
00:31:13Luca decides to target black people
00:31:16because he holds them responsible
00:31:19as well as drug dealing
00:31:20even after Pamela's death
00:31:28Now you have to imagine this 28 year old boy
00:31:31on his Alfa 147
00:31:34with the stereo at maximum
00:31:37he was listening to Disturbed
00:31:39who are an American alternative metal band
00:31:52left hand on the steering wheel
00:31:55his right hand on the gun he holds on the seat
00:32:01goes up towards the city
00:32:03and also here where he starts to see people of color
00:32:07male
00:32:08he starts to fire off the shots he has at his disposal
00:32:11have you always been alone in the car?
00:32:14Yes
00:32:15has there ever been anyone with her?
00:32:17I do everything myself
00:32:18because I don't want to
00:32:19except that I wouldn't have been able to shoot
00:32:22if there was anyone
00:32:23let's do the work in a seven
00:32:24it's very low
00:32:25very small
00:32:26that is, it seemed like he was pissed off for the other one
00:32:35Traini shoots and shoots into the crowd
00:32:37with the idea of shooting in the crowd
00:32:39there is the idea of cleaning randomly
00:32:41the vigilante the avenger
00:32:43makes no distinction between its victims
00:32:46it brings to mind a story
00:32:48when we Italians were the bad guys
00:32:50around the world
00:32:51a great right-wing intellectual told it
00:32:54Joseph Prezzolini
00:32:55in a 1958 book
00:32:57which was called
00:32:58The New Orleans massacre
00:33:00we are in New Orleans
00:33:01and some Sicilians
00:33:04they are accused of having killed
00:33:05the police chief
00:33:07they are tried but are acquitted
00:33:09the good bourgeois of New Orleans
00:33:12they don't take it well
00:33:13and an angry mob of 20,000 people
00:33:16he goes to tear himself away from prison
00:33:18the Italians
00:33:19and does summary justice
00:33:21this is how Prezzolini tells it
00:33:24as to who is entitled to the right
00:33:26I'm with Manzoni
00:33:27who said that the knife
00:33:29to separate exactly the right
00:33:31from the unjust of men
00:33:33has not yet been found
00:33:34I'm happy to observe
00:33:36that this historical episode
00:33:38it should be taken as evidence
00:33:39that emigration was a tragedy
00:33:41that the difficulties of understanding each other
00:33:43between different peoples and races
00:33:45they are immense
00:33:46and that certainly men
00:33:48they are not good to each other
00:33:49and maybe even
00:33:51which are necessarily bad
00:33:53when they gather in groups
00:33:55and they don't think much about themselves
00:33:56as to the interests of the group
00:33:58all these things
00:34:00said a little roughly
00:34:02and temporarily
00:34:04but let's go back to Traini
00:34:06that keeps shooting
00:34:07and shoot
00:34:08and always shoot in the crowd
00:34:19in the morning I go to the market
00:34:21so I buy some headphones
00:34:24when it's cold
00:34:25this is a few things for me
00:34:35I put on the music
00:34:36and I have the headphones
00:34:38but when I walk
00:34:40always for my life
00:34:42I always look
00:34:44what do I have near me
00:34:46my friends too
00:34:48they ask me
00:34:48Omar because he always looks
00:34:50behind behind
00:34:52you never know
00:35:02I turn around
00:35:03I see that someone
00:35:04which already has me
00:35:05I saw that already
00:35:11he pointed at me
00:35:12the gun
00:35:14that there is the hood
00:35:16black
00:35:17he put
00:35:18me when I turned around
00:35:21while I saw it
00:35:22he has already shot
00:35:29they're shooting
00:35:33I heard another one
00:35:35gunshot
00:35:36I don't know where he got me
00:35:38because at that moment
00:35:39I don't hear
00:35:40I only saw that I'm on the ground
00:35:41then I said
00:35:43I'm still breathing
00:35:48and I got up
00:35:49I tried
00:35:50feet
00:35:50I saw that it works
00:35:52I said
00:35:53not here I am
00:35:54I'm not waiting for anyone
00:35:56I started running
00:36:01after having injured the first people
00:36:04he heads towards the station
00:36:06another place for him linked to situations of degradation and dispatch
00:36:29shoots again and sculpts in this case a woman Jennifer Otioto a Nigerian
00:36:41shoot at the train station
00:36:44shoot in Via Gigli
00:36:46shooting in Corso Cairoli
00:36:49Cairoli Street
00:36:50ok ok
00:36:50we'll be there right away
00:36:52then he shoots in Devedini Street
00:36:55Corso Cavour
00:36:57shoots in Spalato Street
00:37:02in via Spalato exactly he shoots in front of the house where Osegale killed Pamela
00:37:07and then instead continues along the same road and shoots at the provincial headquarters of the Democratic Party
00:37:16party that he explicitly indicates as responsible for the immigration policies in place in Italy
00:37:30that day, February 3rd, was a Saturday
00:37:34I remember it was raining
00:37:36my mother called me and told me that
00:37:38something was happening in Macerata
00:37:41of a black car driving around shooting
00:37:47after I ended the phone call with my mother
00:37:50I immediately went to look on social media
00:37:53I saw some pictures
00:37:56I thought
00:37:58it could have been my brother's car
00:38:05he also listens to the radio
00:38:07he knows very well that he is the number one wanted man
00:38:09He knows very well that he cannot continue this rampage for long.
00:38:13then go back home
00:38:15the mother is at home
00:38:21my mom says that
00:38:23He made a mess of things and killed 5 or 6 people.
00:38:28that he was going to hand himself in immediately anyway
00:38:53Traini talks about the desire for justice but justice is something very different
00:38:58justice is not revenge
00:39:00this is the law of retaliation, applied indiscriminately, moreover
00:39:05two thousand years of evolution of Western thought
00:39:08They should have taught us that justice is something different
00:39:12it is administered in the courts
00:39:13it serves precisely to distance those who have suffered an injustice
00:39:16or believes he has suffered a wrong from the person who committed that wrong
00:39:20but in reality this is not in traini's thoughts at that moment
00:39:24there is only hatred, racial hatred
00:39:26behind that illuminated window of the Ancona prison
00:39:29Luca Traini accused of massacre with the aggravating circumstance of racial hatred
00:39:34for the first time he finds himself before a magistrate
00:39:42the charges that have been brought against Traini
00:39:45they were those of the massacre crime
00:39:48illegal possession of a firearm
00:39:51the dangerous explosions
00:39:52all aggravated by the circumstance of having committed the act
00:39:56for racial hatred
00:40:02I believe that the aggravating factor of racial hatred
00:40:07did not exist in the specific case
00:40:10and Luca too, to be honest
00:40:13even from a legal point of view
00:40:15unable to fully understand what this aggravating circumstance meant
00:40:19he says but I'm not a racist
00:40:21but the initial objectives were at the edge of the axe
00:40:26the drug dealers at the Cerdini di Azza
00:40:34so mine wasn't a purely racial raid
00:40:38but the fact that all the drug dealers are black
00:40:43It's not that I attacked all the blacks
00:40:45Traini tried to contest the aggravating circumstance of racial hatred
00:40:49saying that if he wanted to act out of racial hatred
00:40:54for example, he would have chosen as his objective
00:40:58to go and shoot up businesses run by black people
00:41:05if I had wanted it it was racial hatred
00:41:09I would have hit the shops too, the Africans
00:41:12so she first went to Cermini Diaz
00:41:15where she knows that black people deal drugs
00:41:18Exactly
00:41:22if all the drug dealers are black
00:41:24after that it's another matter
00:41:26drowned
00:41:36Traini has always denied and will always deny
00:41:39that what he did on February 3rd
00:41:41is the result of racism
00:41:45which in reality the judges cannot accept
00:41:50then saw who had hit
00:41:53and seeing what they then found at his house
00:42:05During the house searches
00:42:08far-right magazines were found
00:42:10books like Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf
00:42:13DVDs and videotapes about Nazi Germany
00:42:17and on fascist Italy
00:42:19two flags with the Celtic cross
00:42:22and some Nazi swastika drawings
00:42:29I have always considered Luca
00:42:31like an avenging angel
00:42:33that he wanted in a completely wrong way
00:42:37bring some balance
00:42:39in what is in his head
00:42:40it had been something shocking
00:42:42the death of Pamela Mastropietro
00:42:45and bring back a bit of an avenging angel
00:42:47avenge that death
00:42:49anger and emotion in Rome
00:42:51for the last farewell to Pamela Mastropietro
00:42:58This is a community of African people who all know each other
00:43:03how do they know the oliga torn to pieces in Pamela
00:43:08and they covered it up
00:43:10because in my opinion they cover them
00:43:12they covered it and they cover them
00:43:14so I wanted to teach these people
00:43:17which maybe for my concept
00:43:20she believes she is unpunished
00:43:21but he must know that in the end I have nothing to lose
00:43:26he wanted to be the avenging angel among the inima
00:43:30we said it and said it again
00:43:31this is also unacceptable because
00:43:33there is a book that must have inspired him
00:43:37I want to read a little passage from it
00:43:40if we accept as the first task of the State
00:43:43maintenance, care and evolution
00:43:46of the best characteristics of the breed
00:43:48it is evident that the state measures
00:43:50must expand from birth
00:43:52of the little son of the nation
00:43:54and that the State must educate the child
00:43:58to make another element out of it
00:43:59of a continuous propagation of the race
00:44:03and this is Mein Kampf
00:44:05Adolf Hitler's book
00:44:07and this was one of Traini's readings
00:44:15Traini does something very symbolic
00:44:17goes to Pollenza
00:44:21where the two trolls had been found
00:44:25which contained the remains of poor Pamela Mastropietro
00:44:35he gets out of the car
00:44:37recite an Our Father and two Hail Marys
00:44:39and places a votive candle with the effigy of Mussolini
00:44:49I mean, I think that sometimes these right-wing and right-wing ideologies
00:44:53extremes can find fertile ground
00:44:56especially in those who do not have a very strong cultural basis
00:45:03I believe this argument is clearly unsustainable.
00:45:08Luca Traini puts a strategy into action
00:45:12but carries out a project
00:45:14which is connected to its cultural and ideological system
00:45:18But what is it that this ideology expresses in you?
00:45:22I am inspired by the idea of solving the country
00:45:26of the purity of a people who do not take drugs
00:45:29who doesn't get high, who works, who raises a family
00:45:32but there is racial hatred in what is done
00:45:35racial hatred?
00:45:36Racial hatred is inherent in ideology
00:45:40I mean, but there is no racial overcoming
00:45:49Racism, and that's why it's extremely dangerous,
00:45:52it is divided into different devices
00:45:55and the devices are varied
00:45:57immigrants lead to increased crime
00:46:00They are drug dealers, they steal resources, they lead to degradation
00:46:07They are all articulations of the same racist paradigm.
00:46:11On February 3, Luca Traini believes that the conditions are ripe
00:46:18to implement an action that is capable of bringing about
00:46:22in the square, in the streets, in public debate
00:46:28the primary problem of the war on immigration
00:46:31and puts its action into action
00:46:37His evolution into a killer, into a potential killer
00:46:42in reality it has some deep motivations
00:46:46that are inside his discomfort
00:46:48I really believe that he, before being the white man
00:46:52before being a vigilante in his own way
00:46:56before being a defender of a clumsy definition of nation
00:47:02he is the one who wrote on his fingers
00:47:04an outcast
00:47:07and he thought that one day as a hero, in his vision
00:47:12could compensate for his thousand, two thousand days of invisibility
00:47:17My life began three days ago
00:47:20I started living three days ago
00:47:22when I freed myself from all the evil that was inside me
00:47:28says Traini
00:47:29But let's stop for a moment
00:47:30that evil, that hatred
00:47:32they are children of marginalization
00:47:34yes, but they are also children of the narrative
00:47:36in particular of one of those narratives
00:47:39who oppose each other on the issue of migrants
00:47:42it's the narrative that tells us that I am the enemy
00:47:46danger, something to defend oneself from
00:47:49it is the narration of the great fear
00:47:53but how do things really stand?
00:47:55between 2016 and 2017
00:47:58Over 100,000 people have landed in Italy
00:48:01100,000 people per year
00:48:04driven by hunger, driven by famine
00:48:06driven by need
00:48:07driven by poverty
00:48:09driven by necessity
00:48:11there was no force
00:48:14of government, of opposition
00:48:16no control of the seas
00:48:18no territorial blockade
00:48:21no wall hypothesized
00:48:23nowhere in the world
00:48:24that he managed to stop a wave
00:48:26that can't be stopped
00:48:28the freedom to migrate
00:48:31it is equivalent to the freedom to remain
00:48:36the migratory phenomenon in Italy
00:48:37it has the same non-emergency numbers
00:48:42which applies for example to the number of crimes
00:48:43of thefts, robberies, murders
00:48:46decreases year by year in Italy
00:48:48but we continue to be more and more afraid
00:48:50of this phenomenon
00:48:52this is a well-known mechanism
00:48:54of collective hypnosis
00:48:56or in any case of collective conviction
00:48:58when there is no data
00:49:00there is no invasion
00:49:02I say it in numbers
00:49:02because the numbers still speak of thousands
00:49:05at most tens of thousands of flows
00:49:07we are talking about a drop in the ocean
00:49:09our country faces this problem
00:49:12of migratory flows in all directions
00:49:15with great shortsightedness and in my opinion
00:49:17even with so much hypocrisy
00:49:18because we are a place
00:49:19from which many migrations started
00:49:21towards the outside
00:49:22and we still are now
00:49:23we continue to forget this
00:49:27the rejection of the foreigner is unfortunately
00:49:29a human tendency
00:49:31cognitive part of our mind
00:49:33very strong
00:49:34that is, there is this paradoxical thing about racism
00:49:37of dangerous
00:49:38Today we know that human races do not exist
00:49:41we are one large population
00:49:44divided into many different peoples
00:49:46but racism instead
00:49:47It is very powerful in our mind
00:49:49and racism itself feeds on it
00:49:51of cognitive errors that we often make
00:49:55let's take the specific case
00:49:56for example by Luca Traini
00:49:57a category used in this debate
00:49:59the Nigerian drug dealer
00:50:01So what category does the Nigerian drug dealer fall into?
00:50:04it is simply the conjunction of two sets
00:50:06the drug dealers and the Nigerians
00:50:08because in a person they coincide
00:50:10enough there is none of this
00:50:14but if I say
00:50:16we can also do an experiment
00:50:17Nigerian drug dealer
00:50:19a person
00:50:20what do many do?
00:50:22they add something
00:50:22that is, he is a drug dealer because he is Nigerian
00:50:25that is, I added a cause-effect relationship
00:50:28which is not actually the case
00:50:29but our mind tends to go overboard
00:50:32in this cause-effect relationship
00:50:35and then further step
00:50:37typical of our mind
00:50:38ah but all Nigerians deal drugs
00:50:41that is what we call
00:50:42the undue generalization
00:50:45these are two examples of mental mechanisms
00:50:47that promote racism
00:50:49and which unfortunately are very deep-rooted
00:50:51in our way of thinking
00:50:52because among other things they have
00:50:53of the deep evolutionary reasons
00:50:55because we come from a history
00:50:56of small groups
00:50:57which were in conflict with each other
00:50:59then through school
00:51:01education and culture
00:51:02we can reduce these effects
00:51:04but let's always keep in mind
00:51:05that racism is down there
00:51:06that lurk in the most exposed nerves
00:51:09of our mind
00:51:10of our way of thinking unfortunately
00:51:15to make this story even more dramatic
00:51:17there is the fact that incredibly
00:51:19in the following years
00:51:20Luca Traini becomes a source of inspiration
00:51:23for other white supremacists
00:51:25perpetrators of massacres
00:51:26for example there is a New Zealander
00:51:29his name is Brandon Tarrant
00:51:30who is a theoretician of ethnic substitution
00:51:33and says we have to shoot him
00:51:35before they take our place
00:51:37this is how you arm yourself
00:51:38and massacres Muslims
00:51:40in two mosques
00:51:41good on the butt of one of the weapons
00:51:44used by him
00:51:45there was the name of Luca Traini
00:51:47or like Peyton Gendron
00:51:49an American from Buffalo
00:51:50which kills ten people
00:51:52in a supermarket
00:51:53and praises Luca Traini
00:51:55but let's go back to Macerata
00:51:57let's ask ourselves how the city reacts
00:51:59to everything that's happening
00:52:01it's a shocked city
00:52:03it's a desperate city
00:52:04it's a city that can't find itself
00:52:15what happened
00:52:17It's shocking to me
00:52:19I have a daughter
00:52:20and the thought of being afraid
00:52:22to go out with my daughter
00:52:24because I put her in danger
00:52:25just because of my skin color
00:52:27It's really devastating for me
00:52:34in the immediate vicinity of the city of Macerata
00:52:36she is shocked
00:52:37and scared
00:52:39and angry
00:52:42always calm
00:52:43welcoming
00:52:44zero racism
00:52:45tolerant to the maximum
00:52:47what should I tell him?
00:52:49now something has changed
00:52:50and the fact of that murdered girl
00:52:54it did not go unnoticed
00:52:57Traini's story
00:52:59it's a story that starts
00:53:01from a climate
00:53:03of a heinous crime
00:53:05people expressing solidarity
00:53:07towards Luca
00:53:08he recommends me
00:53:09to defend it as best as possible
00:53:11because he is their idol
00:53:13that is, something disturbing
00:53:14in some ways, no?
00:53:16but it gives the measure
00:53:17of what in the city
00:53:19and not only is it happening
00:53:24when Traini completed
00:53:26that gesture
00:53:28irrational
00:53:28has become
00:53:30for some
00:53:31really
00:53:32I'm not saying a martyr
00:53:33but certainly an example
00:53:35there is the desperate
00:53:36or less from these foreigners
00:53:38that they have become
00:53:39they believe in themselves
00:53:40about us
00:53:40and of us of himself of A
00:53:41there are several factors
00:53:43who contributed
00:53:45to create that context
00:53:46there is no problem
00:53:48of racism
00:53:48of the people of Macerata
00:53:50you compare them
00:53:52In my opinion
00:53:53In my opinion
00:53:54No
00:53:55absolutely
00:53:56No
00:53:59we are going through
00:54:01in that period
00:54:02an election campaign
00:54:03which is played a lot
00:54:04on the topic of immigration
00:54:06there is a media management
00:54:08of the Mastro Pietro affair
00:54:11which continually associates
00:54:14that drama
00:54:16that tragedy
00:54:17to the problem of immigration
00:54:18people are coming
00:54:20unwanted
00:54:21and who are these people
00:54:22unwanted?
00:54:23those who call each other
00:54:24to the fascist parties
00:54:25it cannot be compared
00:54:27a gesture
00:54:28of crime news
00:54:29like what happened
00:54:31to the girl
00:54:32who is dead
00:54:32with a gesture
00:54:33of mold
00:54:34blatantly racist
00:54:36which is called
00:54:37to the farnifications
00:54:38on the race
00:54:44against proof of this
00:54:46it's in the fact
00:54:47that immediately
00:54:48after the facts
00:54:49however, intervenes
00:54:50a device
00:54:51from some circles
00:54:52strongly justificatory
00:54:54I refer to
00:54:56to various organizations
00:54:57of the external right
00:54:58including Forza Nuova
00:55:01at night at Ponte Milvio
00:55:03in Rome it appeared
00:55:04a banner
00:55:05that praises
00:55:06to the author
00:55:07of the racist raid
00:55:12on social networks
00:55:13they appeared
00:55:14lots of messages
00:55:15praising him
00:55:20saying he had done well
00:55:22saying that
00:55:23of migrants
00:55:24we couldn't take it anymore
00:55:25saying that
00:55:26he was the vigilante
00:55:27that finally
00:55:28he did that
00:55:29that politics
00:55:30she hadn't been able to do it
00:55:31we are in a period
00:55:32in which
00:55:33the phenomenon
00:55:34migratory
00:55:36it comes particularly
00:55:38stigmatized
00:55:38with an emergency
00:55:39an emergency
00:55:40which then in reality
00:55:40there is no
00:55:49my name is Omar
00:55:52name
00:55:52with name
00:55:53and I come from
00:55:56Gambia
00:56:00my name is
00:56:01Wilson Kofi
00:56:02I'm 28 years old
00:56:04and I'm from Ghana
00:56:06I arrived in Italy
00:56:08in Pozzallo
00:56:10I've been there
00:56:11For
00:56:1220
00:56:1323
00:56:1425 days
00:56:16then they took me
00:56:17in Macerata
00:56:18to
00:56:18Kamba
00:56:19I traveled
00:56:21crossing
00:56:22the desert
00:56:23and then the sea
00:56:24and I arrived in Italy
00:56:268
00:56:26or 9 years ago
00:56:33Before
00:56:34I worked with the mimics
00:56:36who are completely imitators
00:56:38a little bit understanding
00:56:40but now I'm working with a finger that makes sheds
00:56:50macerated at the beginning 8
00:56:529 years ago
00:56:53it was a bit off-putting
00:56:56But today things have changed
00:56:58life is very hard
00:57:03since that happened to me
00:57:05what I thought and what I did
00:57:14I've been thinking since I was
00:57:16what did I do
00:57:18bad
00:57:18bad
00:57:20because to me
00:57:21why is he shooting at me
00:57:25Today I'm afraid to stay in Macerata
00:57:27but I have no other options
00:57:29I have to live here
00:57:31I for my life Macerata
00:57:33I've always found myself well
00:57:36I'm in trouble
00:57:38I'm not in trouble
00:57:42I do many things
00:57:43to mingle with people
00:57:46because we say
00:57:48I came to Italy
00:57:49if I find Italians who walk with a pedi
00:57:53I have to walk with one foot
00:57:55Me too
00:57:59the following Saturday in the city
00:58:01a demonstration is being held
00:58:02against all types of xenophobia and racism
00:58:06a demonstration that will be attended by more than 20,000 people
00:58:11it is a demonstration that clearly expresses a fact
00:58:16and that is that the city of Macerata
00:58:19it is more generally the social that lives in this country
00:58:22he is not a social racist
00:58:27the major difficulties for integration are the disparities
00:58:36we welcome immigrants
00:58:38so that they may become our workers for menial tasks
00:58:43that is, we want
00:58:45the word is a bit ugly
00:58:47we want the servants
00:58:50and this does not create integration
00:58:53but it creates greater disparity
00:58:5612 years in prison for Luca Traini
00:58:58who shot at the immigrants Neferi 6
00:59:01the court recognized the aggravating circumstance of racial hatred
00:59:05the victims, Luca Traini being financially insolvent
00:59:11they did not receive compensation
00:59:14this sentence of condemnation which is important
00:59:17also because it does historical justice
00:59:22to what has been done
00:59:24to the acts that were committed
00:59:26but it is also a sentence that the victims
00:59:29which today leaves very little
00:59:39From prison, Luca Traini wrote a letter to the ADN Kronos agency
00:59:44you might think who knows what about me
00:59:46but I'm not a monster
00:59:47I exploded once
00:59:49only once my mind switched off
00:59:52Now what happened helped me understand where I went wrong in my life
00:59:57then he continues talking about his mother and talking about Pamela
01:00:00but let's stop here
01:00:02What will prison do to Luca Traini?
01:00:05will it change it? will it improve it?
01:00:07will it make him think deeply about his actions?
01:00:11we can't know this
01:00:12we can only hope so
01:00:14Let's leave you this evening with a letter to Italy
01:00:19to mother Italy
01:00:20to Italy which can be a stepmother
01:00:22a rapper wrote it
01:00:24half Italian half Tunisian
01:00:26his name is Gali
01:00:27let's listen to her
01:00:322
01:00:321
01:00:34congratulations
01:00:362018
01:00:39smoke inside change face
01:00:41how it ends is tested
01:00:43I have to be careful damn it
01:00:46if I get her pregnant then my mother will tell me
01:00:48because I'm still a child
01:00:50a little Italian, a little Tunisian
01:00:53she from Puerto Rico
01:00:54if it happens for Trump it's a mess
01:00:57but what kind of policy is this?
01:00:58what is the difference between left and right?
01:01:01ministers change but not the soup
01:01:03the toilet on the left is the bathroom at the bottom right
01:01:05rite
01:01:05for my way better than nothing
01:01:08masch che nada okay
01:01:10he'll wait for you under the house if mom doesn't like it
01:01:12I don't like you
01:01:14temperature is record
01:01:15he tells me I knew it but I don't believe it
01:01:17I'm not stupid
01:01:19there is that the mind is closed and has remained behind
01:01:22like the Middle Ages
01:01:24the newspaper abuses it and talks about the foreigner
01:01:26as if he were a student
01:01:28without a passport
01:01:29looking for money
01:01:31I feel lucky
01:01:33at the end of the day
01:01:35when I'm lucky
01:01:37it's the end of the world
01:01:40I'm a crazy person who reads
01:01:42a lawless madman
01:01:45out of the flock
01:01:46who writes fools who reads
01:01:48massacre in a nightclub in the Lancone area
01:01:52Genoa is a city split in two
01:01:54after the bridge collapse
01:01:56God!
01:01:58oh God!
01:02:02thank you, thank you
01:02:18battlefield
01:02:26so I always thought at that moment there
01:02:28why didn't you stop
01:02:38rationally I already knew I was looking for a body
01:02:49a challenge that control that he absolutely wanted to continue to maintain
01:03:00and tells him
01:03:01I
01:03:02I will take your children away from you
01:03:14I never thought
01:03:16to kill Giulia
01:03:18to kill Giulia
01:03:18I thought about killing Giulia
01:03:18there would be a father
01:03:19I thought about killing Giulia
01:03:22yes he is a father
01:03:24that made me think of killing Giulia
01:03:25Thank you all.
Commenti